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Benzaldehyde dehydrogenase from chitosan-treated Sorbus aucuparia cell cultures

Research Authors
Mariam M. Gaid, Debabrata Sircar, Till Beuerle, Adinpunya Mitra, Ludger Beerhues
Research Department
Research Journal
Journal of Plant Physiology
Research Publisher
ScienceDirect
Research Rank
Impact factor 3.549
Research Vol
166
Research Website
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0176161709001060
Research Year
2009
Research Member
Research_Pages
1343-1349
Research Abstract

Cell cultures of Sorbus aucuparia respond to the addition of chitosan with the accumulation of the biphenyl phytoalexin aucuparin. The carbon skeleton of this inducible defense compound is formed by biphenyl synthase (BIS) from benzoyl-CoA and three molecules of malonyl-CoA. The formation of benzoyl-CoA proceeds via benzaldehyde as an intermediate. Benzaldehyde dehydrogenase (BD), which converts benzaldehyde into benzoic acid, was detected in cell-free extracts from S. aucuparia cell cultures. BD and BIS were induced by chitosan treatment. The preferred substrate for BD was benzaldehyde (Km=49 μM). Cinnamaldehyde and various hydroxybenzaldehydes were relatively poor substrates. BD activity was strictly dependent on the presence of NAD+ as a cofactor (Km=67 μM)